- China: Regime limits fuel price hike to cushion impact of rising oil prices
Source: Reuters
“China took steps to cushion the impact of rising fuel prices on Monday, increasing the regulated ceiling prices for retail gasoline and diesel but limiting the hike to about half what would normally be applied under the government’s pricing mechanism. The adjustments brought on by rising oil prices linked to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran were still the largest on record, however, lifting price limits close to levels seen in 2022 after Russia invaded Ukraine. State planner the National Development and Reform Commission said on Monday it would raise the maximum retail prices for gasoline and diesel by 1,160 yuan ($168) per metric ton and 1,115 yuan per metric ton, respectively, starting from Monday midnight.” (03/23/26)
- Pfizer to seek US FDA approval for Lyme disease vaccine candidate despite trial miss
Source: CNBC
“Pfizer on Monday said it will seek regulatory approval for a Lyme disease vaccine candidate despite the shot failing a late-stage trial. Pfizer said the vaccine missed the trial’s statistical goal because not enough people in the study contracted Lyme disease to be confident in the results. Still, the company said the shot reduced the rate of infection by more than 70% in people who received the vaccine versus placebo, efficacy the company thinks is strong enough to take to regulators. … A vaccine for Lyme disease isn’t expected to become a best-seller for Pfizer …. But Pfizer had billed the Lyme vaccine results as one of its major catalysts this year, and it represented a chance to introduce the only human vaccine for Lyme disease.” (03/23/26)
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/23/pfizer-lyme-disease-vaccine-trial-fda-approval.html
- Zimbabwe: Regime thugs abduct top opponent of changes extending president’s rule
Source: ABC News
“Zimbabwe has detained the leading opponent to planned constitutional amendments that would extend the rule of the country’s 83-year-old president and make the post elected by Parliament, not the people. Former finance minister Tendai Biti was set to appear in court on Monday. It’s the highest profile detention yet of critics of the attempt to allow President Emmerson Mnangagwa to extend his rule, due to end in 2028, by two years. Police in recent months have banned meetings or arrested people for gathering to express opposition. Biti leads the Constitutional Defenders Forum, a group campaigning against the amendments. CDF spokesman Jacob Rukweza said Biti and programs director Morgan Ncube are accused of holding a public meeting without notifying police.” (03/23/26)
- SCOTUS turns down journalist’s case against Texas regime thugs who arrested her for reporting
Source: NBC News
“The Supreme Court on Monday rejected an attempt by a citizen journalist to revive her civil rights claim after she was arrested for soliciting information from a police officer. At issue in the case brought by reporter Priscilla Villarreal was whether the officials in Laredo, Texas, could claim the legal defense of ‘qualified immunity,’ which would protect them from being sued. The court’s refusal to hear the case means her claim that the officials had violated the Constitution’s First Amendment, which protects freedom of speech, cannot go forward.” (03/23/26)
- DoorDash offers added payments to US and Canadian drivers as Trump’s war idiocy drives up gas prices
Source: San Diego Union-Tribune
“DoorDash is offering extra compensation to U.S. and Canadian drivers as part of a temporary program to help offset rising gas prices. The San Francisco-based delivery company announced the program Monday as the national average price for gas hit $3.96 per gallon in the U.S., according to AAA. That’s 35% higher than one month ago. DoorDash said U.S. drivers with a DoorDash debit card will earn 10% cash back on any gas purchase, up from the usual rate of 2%. More than half of DoorDash drivers have the card, the company said. The company said drivers who travel 125 miles or more while making deliveries will also receive a weekly fuel payment, starting at $5 and up to a maximum of $15. … It’s not yet clear if rivals will match DoorDash’s payments.” (03/23/26)
https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/2026/03/23/doordash-gas-prices/
- Photos show ICE thugs at US airports to fill in for absentee TSA gropers
Source: SFGate
“Federal immigration officers have arrived at U.S. airports, fulfilling President Donald Trump’s pledge to deploy them to help the Transportation Security Administration during a partial government shutdown. The shutdown has caused long lines at security checkpoints across the country. This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.” (03/23/26)
https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/photos-show-ice-agents-at-us-airports-where-the-22091897.php
- Leonid Radvinsky, 1982-2026
Source: US News & World Report
“Leonid Radvinsky, the secretive billionaire owner of OnlyFans who reshaped the porn industry with a subscription model, has died at 43 from cancer, the company said on Monday. The Ukrainian-American entrepreneur bought Fenix International, the parent company of OnlyFans, from the platform’s British founder Tim Stokely in 2018. He served as a director on Fenix’s board and was its majority shareholder. Under his ownership, OnlyFans turned from a platform that once avoided explicit content into an adults-only phenomenon with more than 300 million users and over $1 billion in annual revenue, powered by erotic performers and celebrity influencers.” (03/23/26)
- NY: Two pilots killed after Air Canada jet hits fire truck, forcing LaGuardia airport to close
Source: Fox News
“Two pilots were killed at New York’s LaGuardia Airport late Sunday night after an Air Canada jet struck a Port Authority vehicle on the ground while landing, officials said. More than 40 passengers, crew members and Aircraft Rescue and Firefighting officers were hospitalized. The airport is expected to be closed until 2 p.m. Monday. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney commented on the ground collision at LaGuardia Airport in New York that left two pilots dead and dozens of others injured. Carney wrote in a post on X that the fatal collision involving an Air Canada Express aircraft was ‘deeply saddening.’ ‘Canadian officials are working closely with their U.S. counterparts on the ground as the investigation continues,’ Carney wrote. ‘My thoughts are with the victims, their families, and all those impacted.'” (03/23/26)
https://www.foxnews.com/live-news/new-york-laguardia-plane-crash-march-23
- Trump regime, French company reach “nearly $1 billion” deal to reduce US energy independence, raise electricity rates
Source: Barron’s
“The United States and TotalEnergies on Monday signed an agreement to end the French company’s offshore US wind farm projects and redirect those funds towards fossil fuel production, with the US interior secretary saying the deal was worth ‘nearly $1 billion.’ … [TotalEnergies CEO Patrick] Pouyanne welcomed the deal, saying it redirected TotalEnergies’s $928 million investment in two wind farm leases off the North Carolina and New York coasts into US natural gas projects, in particular the Rio Grande LNG plant.” (03/23/26)
- The War on Immigrants Meets the War on Iran
Source: Future of Freedom Foundation
by Jacob G Hornberger“For those Americans who still believe that the U.S. government’s deadly, destructive, illegal, and unconstitutional war of aggression against Iran is about concern for the freedom and well-being of the people of Iran, what the U.S. government is now doing with its war on immigrants will help dispel such Americans of such a quaint notion. That’s because U.S. officials are in the process of deporting 400 Iranian immigrants to Iran as part of their war on immigrants. Yes, you read that right! U.S. officials are forcibly returning 400 Iranian immigrants to a country that the U.S. government and the Israeli government continue to bomb to smithereens. How is that action consistent with a supposed concern for the freedom and well-being of the Iranian people?” (03/23/26)
https://www.fff.org/2026/03/23/the-war-on-immigrants-meets-the-war-on-iran/
- The Late Robert Mueller, Bill of Rights Executioner
Source: Libertarian Institute
by Jim Bovard“Former FBI director Robert Mueller died last week at the age of 81. The New York Times eulogized him as a ‘button-down, lockjawed, rock-ribbed exemplar of a vanishing caste.’ In reality, Mueller was simply a twenty-first century version of J. Edgar Hoover, trampling the Constitution and seizing new power on any pretext.” (03/23/26)
https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/the-late-robert-mueller-bill-of-rights-executioner
- Why AI may never be profitable
Source: Sex and the State
by Cathy Reisenwitz“I’d kind of assumed that the frontier AI labs (Anthropic, OpenAI, X) would reap the financial rewards of frontier AI development. But that might not be correct. AI might be more like electricity than Google. After all, who profited from electrification? It certainly wasn’t the inventors. Or their companies. The people who got rich from electricity were the ones who used it to make other things. Profits went to the factory owners who electrified their factories and the folks who sold light bulbs. The electric companies became utilities. I had assumed that the companies currently building AI would become the next Google and Bing. However, many believe that the actual models are more likely to become cheap and interchangeable, like electricity. Or Wi-Fi. Or railroads.” (03/23/26)
https://cathyreisenwitz.substack.com/p/why-ai-may-never-be-profitable
- The Quest for Authenticity
Source: Law & Liberty
by Samuel Mace“In democracies, rulers require the consent of the governed. Even within elite theories of democracies, some sort of common consent is necessary. The easiest way to secure such consent is to persuade the people that you are really one of them. Politicians from elite backgrounds work to appear as if they are unafraid of working a day in McDonald’s, or plead for the fortunes of a favourite football team. They are not ‘regular people,’ but they try to look like they belong. These efforts cut across ideology as attempts to cultivate authenticity emerge on both the left and right. But politics cannot be defined by personality alone.” (03/23/26)
- Imagining a 2028 Presidential Campaign for a Limited Presidency
Source: Liberal Currents
by Dennis Lytton“Jimmy Carter in 1977 cut the size of the White House staff by 30%. Coming just two years after Nixon’s resignation, Carter’s election coincided with a series of legislative reforms to tame the imperial presidency. Carter for a brief shining time seemed to embody that smaller presidency. He announced on his inauguration day that, ‘I would never permit my White House staff to try to run the major departments of government.’ We’ve endured nine withering years of Trump’s America (including what we now realize was but a fleeting interregnum under Biden). The idea that the presidency should be an executive with cabinet secretaries and independent agencies constrained strictly to statute and the constitution seems distant. Instead, the American imperial executive is led now by a few unaccountable staffers in the West Wing with the opaque character of a monarch’s courtiers.” (03/23/26)
https://www.liberalcurrents.com/imagining-a-2028-presidential-campaign-for-a-limited-presidency/
- Power Is Built One Conversation at a Time
Source: Our Future
by Sulma Arias“Many people in this country feel attacks on our civil liberties have gone too far. I agree. Heavily armed ICE and CBP agents, who are paid with our tax dollars, hide their identities as they storm into our homes without warrants, suppress free speech, and even murder U.S. citizens who engage in peaceful protest. Many people feel it is time to stop this cruelty and violence. Yet what can we do? One answer is to flood the streets. Indeed, in places like Chicago and Minneapolis, we’ve seen tens of thousands show up to demand an end to the militarized occupation of their cities. And millions nationwide have turned out to No Kings rallies, and will do so again this March 28th. Mass moments like this are important; they show us we are not alone. Yet on their own, they are not enough …” (03/22/26)
https://ourfuture.org/20260322/power-is-built-one-conversation-at-a-time
- Trump wants an Iwo Jima moment in Iran; will Americans be OK with the fallout?
Source: The Hill
by Jos Joseph“The news that the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) might be headed to the Middle East to reinforce the 31st MEU, which was already ordered there, raises the odds that ground troops might play a part in President Trump’s war with Iran. … We all know of Joe Rosenthal’s famous picture of the raising of the American flag on Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima. Trump will want to have a similar image to get the American public hyped about an unpopular war and to boost his own image as a warfighting President along the likes of Abraham Lincoln or Franklin Roosevelt. But what Trump needs to understand is what happened after the Iwo Jima photo was released to the public.” (03/23/26)
https://thehill.com/opinion/national-security/5795673-marines-middle-east-trump/
- Britain Is Bringing Back the Blasphemy Laws — and the Free Speech Union is Taking the Government to Court
Source: The American Conservative
by Toby Young“[UK secretary of state for communities Steve] Reed has officially adopted a definition of ‘anti-Muslim hostility’ — ‘Islamophobia’ by another name — and announced that a government-appointed ‘special representative,’ a so-called ‘czar,’ will record complaints and ensure that anyone who falls foul of the definition is ‘appropriately’ dealt with. … Now, you might think: What’s wrong with that? Nobody wants Muslims to face hatred or discrimination. But here’s the problem. Discrimination against Muslims — indeed, against people of any religion — is already illegal under Britain’s Equality Act of 2010. … Britain repealed blasphemy laws that proscribed attacks on Christianity in 2008. It would be a peculiar irony if, 18 years later, a Labour government reinstated a new version of them …” (03/23/26)
- Why Donald Trump Just Can’t Stop Going to War
Source: TomDispatch
by Patrick Strickland“After protests across Iran turned deadly in January, President Donald Trump promised Iranians that ‘help is on the way’. On February 28th, the U.S. and Israel launched what immediately became a devastating war on Iran. American and Israeli warplanes began dropping bombs on a country of some 93 million people. Trump soon put out a video address, telling Iranians that ‘the hour of your freedom is at hand’. Around the time that video appeared, Iranians in the city of Minab were sorting through the corpses of more than 165 people killed in an airstrike on an elementary school for girls. That same day, an airstrike killed Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, an 86-year-old who was supposedly already in poor health. Throughout the ensuing days, American and Israeli attacks struck hospitals, historic sites, and more schools.” (03/22/26)
https://tomdispatch.com/why-donald-trump-just-cant-stop-going-to-war/
- Could Artificial Intelligence Finally Make Central Planning Work?
Source: Foundation for Economic Education
by Sergio Martinez“During the early 1970s, the Chilean government imposed price controls on thousands of goods while expanding state control over industry. Shortages multiplied, black markets expanded, and economic coordination deteriorated. Political instability soon followed, culminating in the military coup of 1973. At first glance, the lesson seemed clear: central planning could not replicate the complex coordination performed by markets. And yet the idea never completely disappeared. Recent advances in artificial intelligence have revived an old argument. If earlier socialist planners failed because they lacked sufficient computing power, perhaps modern algorithms could finally solve the problem. Some contemporary writers have openly suggested this possibility.” (03/23/26)
https://fee.org/articles/could-artificial-intelligence-finally-make-central-planning-work/
- Two great ideas on how to deal with the Iran war consequences that Trump should consider
Source: New York Post
by Miranda Devine“As we enter the fourth week of the Iran war (or ‘excursion’), here are two great ideas about how to deal with some of the consequences — both from outside the Beltway. In fact, right in New York. One idea, unusually, is from longtime President Trump critic and former swamp creature Richard Haass, now back in his hometown. The other is from Wall Street guru Larry Kudlow, Trump’s great friend and former economic adviser. Both ideas are elegantly unconventional. In his Substack last week, Haass took a moment from trashing the president to suggest an alternative to boots on the ground for the prickly problem of opening the Strait of Hormuz, where tankers carrying one-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas are being throttled by Iran. Don’t send the Marines in to seize Kharg Island, Iran’s principal export terminal — just close the Strait.” (03/22/26)
- The Bottleneck is the Birth Canal
Source: Underthrow
by Max Borders“A confluence of trends, events, and crises are all hitting the West at about the same time. We have entered an era of profound transformation. What lies beyond the pain?” (03/23/26)
https://underthrow.substack.com/p/the-bottleneck-is-the-birth-canal
- It’s Unethical To Have Sympathy For Israelis
Source: Caitlin Johnstone, Rogue Journalist
by Caitlin Johnstone“Israel’s Foreign Ministry has posted a statement on Twitter which reads, ‘The Iranian regime devastated Arad and Dimona by deliberately striking civilians with missiles. Over 100 people were injured, including children. A blatant war crime. Pure terrorism.’ I don’t want to be one of those people who wastes their time criticizing ‘hypocrisy’ in foreign policy, but holy fucking shit, dude. Jesus Christ. My God. I will never, ever express sympathy for Israelis. Ever. Under any circumstances. To do so would be irresponsible, because Israel always weaponizes sympathy and then uses that weapon to commit mass atrocities. If the world gives Israel sympathy for civilians injured by an Iranian airstrike over the weekend in a war Israel started, by Friday they’ll be using that sympathy to justify nuking Tehran. I don’t enjoy holding this position.” [editor’s note: Then perhaps you should start distinguishing Israeli non-combatants from the Israeli regime, Ms. Johnstone; then you’d have a shot at getting it right – TLK] (03/22/26)
- “Identifying with,” Politics, and Life
Source: ProSocial Libertarians
by Andrew Jason Cohen“Its common today to talk about an individual’s ‘identity’ and mean the group or groups they either associate themselves with (i.e., take themselves to be members of) or that they are, ascriptively, taken by others to be associated with. People ‘identify as’ straight, gay, trans, black, Hispanic, Latino, Conservative, Christian, Jewish, etc. etc. etc. What is this really? On one influential account, from (I think) Kwame Appiah (see his The Ethics of Identity), to ‘identify with’ a group is to take reasons from that group as one’s own reasons. This strikes me as a plausible way to understand the term. If Joe identifies as Hispanic, he would take reasons common to other Hispanic people as his own. Ascriptively, I gather, others would assume — rightly or wrongly — that Joe has such reasons. All of that seems entirely plausible. I also think it is (if accurate) unfortunate.” (03/23/26)
https://prosociallibertarians.substack.com/p/identifying-with-politics-and-life
- Scarcity and the Machine: Opportunity Cost in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
Source: Ludwig von Mises Institute
by Michael Matulef“AI is everywhere now — woven into our workplaces, our devices, and our daily routines — and with its spread comes a rising fear: what happens when there’s no meaningful work left for humans? AI is becoming the silent collaborator behind almost everything we make. Yet its presence creates a new kind of tension: not whether we can use it, but how we should. Regardless of the advancements in AI, the central question does not change: given scarcity, what should you do with your time, and what should you let the tools do?” (03/23/26)
https://mises.org/mises-wire/scarcity-and-machine-opportunity-cost-age-artificial-intelligence
- Kentucky’s licensing rules block sexual assault survivors from accessing care
Source: Bluegrass Institute
by Akiva Malamet & Alicia Plemmons“Kentucky’s SANE shortage means many survivors do not get the care they need after the worst experience of their lives.” (03/23/26)
- Weaponized Data via Silencer
Source: Common Sense
by Paul Jacob“‘Authoritarian regimes have developed strong cyber espionage capabilities that enable their influence and coercion operations,’ explains a National Intelligence Council ‘assessment,’ dated April 7, 2020. … The report calls this technological capacity ‘digital authoritarian capabilities’ — yet our own government has the same. It accuses China of marshaling ‘mass surveillance and AI-driven algorithmic tracking of its citizens’ behavior at home to inform the use of soft or coercive incentives and disincentives to control them,’ but that, I’m afraid, is what our government does, too.” (03/24/26)
https://thisiscommonsense.org/2026/03/23/weaponized-data-via-silencer/
- Afroman turns court into First Amendment rap lesson on rights
Source: Fox News
by Jonathan Turley“When singer Joseph E. Foreman took the stand recently in Ohio, his message, like his lyrics, was hardly subtle. Indeed, counsel may have been unsure whether to examine or to hoist him. The rapper, known as ‘Afroman,’ appeared in a suit modeled after an American flag with matching flag-patterned sunglasses. He lashed out at the seven police officers who raided his home and then sued him for publicly mocking them. He insisted that he was the virtual embodiment of the First Amendment in all of its glory. The jury agreed, at least insofar as finding him protected in his parody and public portrayal of the officers. Almost three years ago, I wrote about the case and expressed deep skepticism about the legal viability of the case in light of free speech protections for filming and criticizing public officials.” (03/23/26)
- Supplementing Hayek’s Vision of Interstate Federalism: Insights from Deudney’s Philadelphian System
Source: Isonomia Quarterly
by Vikash Yadav“What are the conditions under which a federation or union of liberal states is possible in the international system? This question preoccupied Friedrich Hayek’s thinking on international relations from the nineteen-thirties onward as he looked to revive liberalism and ease the political frictions that were convulsing through Europe.” (03/23/26)
https://isonomiamag.substack.com/p/supplementing-hayeks-vision-of-interstate
- The destruction of Gaza has not ended
Source: Responsible Statecraft
by Martin Di Caro“As the war in Iran absorbs the world’s attention, with its images of dead school girls and flattened buildings, it may be easy to overlook Gaza. It has been a full five months since a ceasefire went into effect. It did not stop the bloodshed and intense suffering: Israeli forces have killed hundreds of Palestinians since October, and the enclave remains in dire need of food and medicine. Yet Gaza has disappeared from America’s front pages as the Trump administration’s Board of Peace, mostly bereft of Palestinian leadership, attempts to steer a peace plan to its second phase.” (03/23/26)
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/the-destruction-of-gaza-has-not-ended/
- When Judges Go Rogue
Source: Brownstone Institute
by Bobbie Anne Flower Cox“hough I am an attorney in practice for almost thirty years now, I have always said that not all issues can be resolved in a court of law. I say this not because I lack confidence in our judicial system, but because not all issues are subject to the decision of a court. In other words, judges can’t have a say in everything! This is the premise behind our stalwart foundational doctrine of Separation-of-Powers where each of our three, co-equal branches of government have their own sphere of influence and power, and each is to stay out of the others’ lanes.” (03/23/26)
- Adam Smith on the Labor Theory of Value
Source: EconLog
by Steven Horwitz“There are many things Adam Smith got right about economics, including the discipline’s fundamental insight about the unplanned nature of market-driven economic and social order. He is rightly called the founder of economics for that reason. However, he did not get everything right. One of his most important errors, and one he shared with many 18th and 19th century economists, including Karl Marx, was his erroneous theory of value and explanation of price.” (03/23/26)
https://www.econlib.org/econlog/adam-smith-on-the-labor-theory-of-value
- Trump’s Disastrous War Comes Home to Roost
Source: The Contrarian
by Jennifer Rubin“As unpopular as Donald Trump’s ill-conceived, incompetently managed war was when it began, it is now more unpopular with a key segment of voters. ‘Trump’s net approval of -20 for handling the situation in Iran represents a drop from last week’s poll. Then, 39% of Americans approved of how Trump was handling Iran and 52% disapproved — a net approval of -13,’ The Economist/YouGov reported last week. While Democrats and Republicans have not changed their minds about the war much, ‘opinion among Independents of how Trump’s handling Iran fell to 24% approve / 63% disapprove (-39 net) this week from 30% approve / 53% disapprove last week (-23 net).’ The longer the war drags on, and the higher gas prices go, the worse those poll numbers will look for Trump and his pusillanimous enablers in Congress.” (03/23/26)
https://www.contrariannews.org/p/trumps-disastrous-war-comes-home
- Quantum Vibe, 03/23/26
Source: Big Head Press
by Scott BieserCartoon. (03/23/26)
- Why US Cuba Coverage Falls Far Short of the Truth
Source: Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting
by Tyler Wann“The US government’s decades-long economic blockade against Cuba is in many ways not a complicated issue. The policy of restricting trade with the country’s Communist government was put into full force under the Kennedy administration, with the explicit goal of causing enough economic hardship, hunger and desperation to spur regime change. The UN General Assembly has overwhelmingly and consistently voted to end the embargo since a resolution to that effect was first introduced in 1992. Member countries argue that the embargo violates international law. It has cost the country anywhere between $130–170 billion since its inception, and has restricted the Cuban people’s access to food and medicine. And it has not accomplished its primary goal of overthrowing the Cuban government. These are key points that should be included in any article reporting on Cuba’s economic struggles.” (03/22/26)
https://fair.org/home/as-washington-succeeds-in-wrecking-cubas-economy-us-media-blame-the-victim/
- When Hyperglobalization Meets Chaos
Source: Paul Krugman
by Paul Krugman“Donald Trump and his minions are having a meltdown. On Saturday, Trump lashed out at the New York Times for an article saying the obvious — that many of his original war goals, whatever they may have been, remain unaccomplished. Just an hour later, he posted a threat to commit massive war crimes, saying that if Iran doesn’t open the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours — that is, today — he will order U.S. forces to begin bombing civilian power plants. Why the desperation? The answer is obvious. It’s turning out not just that regime change — if that was really the goal — is hard to engineer, but also that the world is a lot more dependent on the Strait of Hormuz than Trump and co. seem to have realized.” (03/23/26)
https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/when-hyperglobalization-meets-chaos
- Silent Cal’s Loud Lesson on Tax Cuts
Source: The Daily Economy
by Jeffery L Degner“A century ago, the federal government ran surpluses under lower tax rates. But that’s impossible with our out-of-control spending.” (03/23/26)
https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/silent-cals-loud-lesson-on-tax-cuts/
- Reason Roundtable, 03/23/26
Source: Reason
“It’s Time To Abolish the TSA.” (03/23/26)
https://reason.com/podcast/2026/03/23/its-time-to-abolish-the-tsa/
- The Political Orphanage
Source: The Political Orphanage
“Heaton Goes to Prison.” (03/23/26)
- Rising, 03/23/26
Source: The Hill
“Robby Soave gives his radar on a hypothetical Tucker Carlson/Joe Kent ticket for the 2028 Presidential Election, highlighting how some on the right have become disgruntled with President Trump’s involvement in Iran.” (03/23/26)
- The Daily Blast With Greg Sargent, 03/23/26
Source: The New Republic
“Trump’s Angry Tirade at Media Goes Haywire, Exposing a Dark MAGA Truth.” (03/23/26)
- EconTalk, 03/23/26
Source: EconTalk
“The Match That Lit the Flame: Hannah Senesh and the Creation of Modern Israel (with Matti Friedman).” (03/23/26)
- Ron Paul Liberty Report, 03/23/26
Source: Ron Paul Liberty Report
“Is Trump Hitting The Panic Button?” (03/23/26)
- The Evil Within, part 6
Source: Future of Freedom Foundation
“Immigration.” (03/23/26)
- The Headlines, 03/23/26
Source: New York Times
“A Deadly Collision at LaGuardia Airport, and Trump Postpones Strait of Hormuz Deadline.” (03/23/26)
- Antiwar News with Dave DeCamp, 03/22/26
Source: Antiwar.com
“Iran Responds To Trump’s Power Plant Threat, Trump Considers Ground Ops in Iran, and More.” (03/22/26)